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Section VI. Operations
Technical Support is available from 8am to 5pm (PST) M - F at [email protected].
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SECTION VII. OPERATIONS
This section will guide you through using your Muse 3D laser cutter. To get started, it is important
to understand the meanings of “Vector Cutting” and “Raster Engraving” and their associated file
types.
VECTOR
RASTER
Project Examples
Signs, Logos, Parts, Gears
Image Engraving, Surface Marking
File Types
PDF, SVG
JPEG, GIF, PNG, TIF
Preferred File Type
JPEG
File Composition
Geometric Formulas
Pixels
General Functions
Vector Cutting
Figure 7.1
Vector cutting is the most common feature of a laser cutter. Vector cutting with a laser means “to cut a
line or shape”. When vector cutting, the laser follows the “vector lines” embedding in the vector image
to cut out the design. The laser starts at a designated location and follows the vector lines until the
shape is cut out. This process is highly accurate and requires no resolution adjustments because of
the properties of a vector image.
Vector Images
In Vector Cut mode, the software receives information from the print stream and interprets it as a
series of paths for the laser head to follow. For the print stream to have vector information, the file
being printed must be a vector image. Vector images are more flexible than raster images. These
images are created using mathematical equations rather than pixel blocks. PDF’s work great as
vector files and are easy to resize without losing resolution. Company logos and branded graphics
are usually vector images.
Engraving
Engraving is the process by which complex designs are etched into a workpiece. Engraving
can range from a simple surface mark all the way through deep material removal. Engraving is
differentiated from cutting in that cutting is the process of burning a closed contour completely
through a workpiece. Engraving is also known as “Raster Engraving” or “Rastering”. For engraving, a
laser has two states: on and off. Every black pixel or “laser dot” is the result of the laser turning on
and firing at that location. This location is controlled by the input image, which can be thought of as a
General Functions
This section will guide you through using your Muse Galvo laser engraver. To get started, it is important to
understand the meanings of “Vector Cutting” and “Raster Engraving” and their associated file types.
Vector Images
In Vector Cut mode, the software receives information from the print stream and interprets it as a series of paths
for the laser head to follow. For the print stream to have vector information, the file being printed must be a vector
image. Vector images are more flexible than raster images. These images are created using mathematical equations
rather than pixel blocks. PDF’s work great as vector files and are easy to resize without losing resolution. Company
logos and branded graphics are usually vector images.
Engraving
Engraving is the process by which complex designs are etched into a workpiece. Engraving can range from a simple
surface mark all the way through deep material removal. Engraving is differentiated from cutting in that cutting is the
process of burning a closed contour completely through a workpiece. Engraving is also known as “Raster Engraving”
or “Rastering”. For engraving, a laser has two states: on and off. Every black pixel or “laser dot” is the result of the
laser turning on and firing at that location. This location is controlled by the input image, which can be thought of as
a “map” of on and off pixels. The laser fires individual pulses corresponding to pixels in an image. When the laser
is operating in raster mode the head moves rapidly from left to right and slowly from top to bottom, engraving your
image pixel by pixel and line by line.
Содержание Muse Galvo
Страница 1: ......